The 50% rule, what qualifies, CRA receipt requirements, and the exceptions that allow 100% deductions
The 50% meal and entertainment deduction is one of the most commonly used — and most commonly misunderstood — deductions in the Canadian tax system. The Income Tax Act allows self-employed individuals and businesses to deduct 50% of eligible meal and entertainment expenses incurred to earn business income. Understanding exactly what qualifies, what documentation the CRA requires, and when 100% deductions apply can save you significant money while keeping you audit-safe.
Under Section 67.1 of the Income Tax Act, the amount you can deduct for food, beverages, and entertainment is limited to 50% of the lesser of: (a) the actual amount paid, or (b) a reasonable amount. This 50% limitation applies whether the expense is incurred by a sole proprietor, a corporation, or an employee claiming business expenses.
| Expense Type | Deductible? | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Restaurant meals with clients or prospects | Yes | 50% |
| Business meals with employees (occasional) | Yes | 50% |
| Coffee/drinks during a client meeting | Yes | 50% |
| Sporting event tickets (client entertainment) | Yes | 50% |
| Theatre/concert tickets for clients | Yes | 50% |
| Golf with clients (green fees) | Yes | 50% |
| Holiday party for all employees (up to 6/year) | Yes | 100% |
| Meals while traveling overnight for business | Yes | 50% |
| Meal delivery to home office (working late) | Marginal | 50% if business purpose clear |
| Meals with yourself alone (no client present) | Generally No | 0% |
| Grocery runs for home office snacks | No | 0% |
| Golf club annual membership dues | No | 0% — specifically excluded |
| Fitness club memberships | No | 0% — personal benefit |
Several situations allow a full 100% deduction for meal and entertainment costs:
The CRA expects you to be able to prove the business purpose of any meal or entertainment expense. Best practice is to write on the receipt (or in your expense log) immediately after the event:
If you are registered for GST/HST, you can only claim an Input Tax Credit (ITC) on 50% of the GST/HST paid on meal and entertainment expenses — matching the 50% income tax deduction limitation. Keep receipts showing the HST paid and apply the 50% limit when preparing your GST/HST return.
The CRA can disallow deductions that are unreasonable. A $500 dinner for two with a client you meet monthly will raise questions. A $500 dinner for a major client closing a $200,000 deal is clearly reasonable. Document the business context when expenses are above average — a brief note explaining the occasion, deal being discussed, or relationship importance goes a long way with CRA reviewers.
When you travel overnight for business, meal expenses are subject to the 50% rule but are otherwise fully legitimate deductions. Keep all receipts. The CRA does not have a prescribed per-diem rate for self-employed individuals (unlike government employees) — claim your actual expenses. If using a company vehicle, note that meals at drive-through or gas station food are still 50% deductible if consumed while traveling for business.
Use your KOHO business card for all client meals and entertainment — your monthly statement becomes a built-in business expense record.